Low moments in theatre criticism
When Agatha Christie’s play SPIDER’S WEB opened
at the Savoy Theatre in London (1954), one of
the disgruntled critics told his readers which
character in the play was the murderer!
***
ON LIGHTING DESIGN
“Great lighting onstage has an unplaceable emotional
effect. You feel it in its swelling or ebbing before
you get a chance to think. Sometimes light’s power
is totally belated: I realized how much certain
arrangements of exposure and shadow have touched
me only when, days later, I recover them in memory.”
Vinson Cunningham. “Lighting the Way,” in The
New Yorker (July 4, 2022)
**
IMPROVING KING LEAR: NAHUM TATE IN 1681
“He produced a happy-ending Lear that held
the stage from the late seventeenth until the early
nineteenth century. Even Dr. Johnson found Shakespeare’s
ending almost unendurable (though he retained Shakespeare’s text for his own edition of the plays).In the Tate revision,
the story ends in a way that justice, and especially poetic justice, seems to require: Lear gets his kingdom back and then resigns, and Cordelia marries Edgar, Gloucester’s good son . (JAMES) Shapiro read us some of the fustian Tate: “My Edgar, Oh!” –“Truth and Vertue shall at last succeed,.” Everyone laughed.
David Denby. Great Books (New York: Simon and Schuster,2005)
‘ Lillian Braithwaite, who was playing opposite Coward
in The Vortex at the time was able to get the better
of (JAMES) Agate in an exchange they had some years
later at a theatrical reception. ‘My dear Lillian,
I have long wanted too tell you that in my opinion
you are the second best actress in London,’ said the
then critic of the Sunday Times.
“’Thank you so much,’ replied Miss Braithwaite.
“I shall cherish that –coming from the second
best dramatic critic.’’
Richard Brier. Coward & Company, (London: Robson
Books, 19870.
Dos Passos in the Theatre
Although John Dos Passos is well-known for his work
as a novelist, he also wrote a play – “The Moon is
a Gong.” When his play opened on Broadway in 1926,
Percy Hammond, critic for the New York Herald-Tribune,
wrote:
“(DOS PASSOS) detonated against everything
from garbage to the radio and left us at
the end of his performance deafened and
confused. His play was of the unsettled
type, all delirious and harum-scarum. It’s
screws were loose….”
***
HIGH BUTTON SHOES (1947)
“The plot , as in most musicals, is negligible.
In this case it involved the arrival of a couple
of mountebanks (Phil Silvers and Joey Faye) in
New Brunswick, Nj, where they sell some
underwater real estate and try to fix the 1913
Princeton –Rutgers football game. The scores
of the stage match (Rutgers 40, Princeton 37)
provoked Princeton undergraduates to come to
New York and enliven opening-night festivities
with a prankish picket lines. The actual score
of the 1913 game was Princeton 14, Rutgers 3.”
NEWSWEEK (October 20, 1947)
**
CHEKHOV’S ADVICE
“After the original rehearsals of The Seagull at
the Moscow Art Theatre, Chekhov was approached by
one of the actors who asked him how he should play
his part. Chekhov replied, ‘As well as possible.’”
Stanley Price
PLAYS & PLAYERS (April 1970)
**
REVIEWING THE PLAY HOTEL ALIMONY
“Out of an inherent sense of decency I was tempted
to ignore Hotel Alimony as though it had never
happened. Reviewing it is a dirty job, but someone
has to do it.”
Burns Mantle
**
THE SERIOUS WORK OF THEATER
"I would say that there is something much bigger in
life and death than we have become aware of (or
adequately recorded) in our living and dying. And
further, to compound this shameless romanticism, I
would say that serious theatre is a search for that
something that is not yet successful but is still
going on."
Tennessee Williams. "Forward' to Sweet Bird of
Youth (New York: A Signet Book, 1959)
**
STAND IN or THE NIGHT I KISSED MIRANDA
As stand-in
I read all the parts,
As actors, actresses, & props
Came down with colds
Or called
In sick. No sooner did the news
Arrive but I flew
Down the aisle, prompt-book
In hand & took
My place upon the stage,
1st as savage
Caliban, or Ferdinand
Or Ariel, filling in &
Playing every role in turn,
Clowns, lords, kerns
& gallowglasses were all one
To me. High flown
Rhetoric brooded in the wings,
One scene a king
Mismatched, unbuckled
As lighting men called
Out their cues, then next
Some princess vexed
With love or overeating.
Couplets on my tongue
Timed the scenery into place,
The list of characters passed
Through my lips. I was them all.
If anyone were ill,
I was well, danced & capered,
Cut a jig, kissed & read
For empty seats, an empty
House –“Oh Lord, flee
To Agincourt before it is
Too late.” Alas, alas,
Hero & heroine were cursed,
Yet stood self-assured
Within the light & I
Rode home. Stand-in, fie
Upon it. Oh fie…..]
Louis Phillips
nothing visible beyond the Sweet Bird of Youth poster image
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Thanks for continuing to share your search for “that something that is not yet successful but is still going on.”
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Fantastic poem!
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Thank you for your generorous response to my poem. It’s great to have supportive readers.
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The Stand-in is great!
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That poem above is a success on every level, and the fact that we currently lack a magazine with the taste to publish it defines anew our sour era.
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I agree: the poem is wonderful.
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Thank you for your generorous response to my poem. It’s great to have supportive readers.
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